Ibtihaj Muhammad (left) competes with Tunisia's Hela Besbes during a women's team sabre qualifying match at the 2011 World Fencing Championships in Catania, Italy.

Antonio Calanni
/ AP

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Originally published on August 8, 2016 9:02 pm

Even if fencer Ibtihaj Muhammad doesn't medal at the Rio Olympics, she is set to make the history books.

Once she hits the fencing strip for her first bout in the women's individual sabre competition on Aug. 8, she will become the first U.S. Olympic athlete to compete while wearing a hijab.

The only Muslim woman on Team USA this summer, Muhammad says she didn't find fencing. The sport found her when she was 12, during a car ride with her mother. They were passing a fencing practice at her local high school in Maplewood, N.J., and her mother couldn't help but notice what the athletes were wearing.

"Fencers, they wear long jackets, and they wear long pants. And as a Muslim youth, I was looking for a sport where I didn't have to alter the uniform in any way," explains Muhammad, now 30.

She began covering in high school as part of her faith. To play volleyball, she wore sweatpants and a T-shirt along with her team's uniform, never feeling fully part of the team.

Fencing solved that problem and, she says, gave her focus.

"I enjoy being able to critique myself when I'm finished fencing," she said in a 2012 interview with NPR's Michel Martin. "It's really easy to lose and be able to fix your mistakes, whereas on a team, you know, I guess whether you win or lose can be in the hands of someone else, and I've never felt comfortable with that."

At this year's Women's Sabre World Cup in January, Muhammad took home bronze. It was enough for her to finally make the U.S. Olympic team. In the months before arriving in Rio, she continued her training at the Fencers Club in New York City with her coach, Akhnaten "Akhi" Spencer-El, who started working with her in 2009.

Spencer-El says her personality is a perfect fit for sabre fencing — strong-willed, aggressive and determined to win since day one.

"Sometimes her personality would get her in trouble only because young kids, they question things — you know, 'Why do I have to do push-ups' and stuff," he says. "But when you do that, you know, there are consequences."

Over the years, Muhammad learned to channel that spirit. She's now ranked No. 2 in the U.S. and eighth internationally in women's sabre fencing. She also launched a fashion line of modest women's clothing after graduating from Duke University.

Through it all, Spencer-El says she has stayed poised against her competitors and a harsh public spotlight while wearing a hijab.

"Going through security and everybody comes out but her, or taking her into another place in the airport to search her than everyone else — it really doesn't even faze her. It's like, 'Here we go again,' I guess," he says.

She shared some of her frustration with her Twitter followers in March after an incident with a volunteer at the South by Southwest festival.

The festival organizers later apologized to Muhammad, who was invited to speak on a panel called "The New Church: Sport as Currency of American Life."

"Sometimes she tells me, 'Peter, being a black woman is not easy. Being a Muslim woman is not easy. Combine the two, I walk down the street, I catch hell,' " says Peter Westbrook, one of Muhammad's fencing mentors.

Westbrook first met Muhammad through the foundation he started to introduce fencing to youth from underserved communities in the New York City area. Most of the students in his Saturday fencing classes are black or Latino and from single-parent homes.

Back in 1984, Westbrook became the first African-American fencer to win an Olympic medal. The bronze medalist says he uses that experience to help Muhammad navigate through a predominantly white sport.

"She's used to fighting. She's used to things coming at her," he says. "This sport is natural for her, because this is a nerve sport."

The daughter of a retired special education teacher and a retired narcotics detective, Muhammad says she'd prefer to focus only on fencing. But the bigotry she has faced has pushed her to speak out about discrimination against the Muslim community.

In April, she tweeted about a man who she says followed her down a street in Manhattan, telling her that she looked "suspicious" and asking if she was "going to blow something up."

"America is all that I know. I feel American down to my bones. For anyone to challenge that idea, that I'm not American or that I don't belong, it's frustrating," Muhammad says. "I want people to see a Muslim woman in hijab and represent the United States this summer. I don't want people to think that that's out of the norm."

Muhammad says she wishes she wasn't the first Muslim woman in a hijab to represent Team USA. But she hopes she won't be the last.

Copyright 2017 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:

We're going to meet an Olympian who has caught the attention of President Obama.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA: I told her bring home the gold.

(LAUGHTER)

OBAMA: Not to put any pressure on you.

INSKEEP: Now, even if she does not get a medal in Rio, fencer Ibtihaj Muhammad is set to make history because she will be the first U.S. athlete to compete while wearing a hijab, or headscarf. NPR's Hansi Lo Wang reports.

HANSI LO WANG, BYLINE: Ibtihaj Muhammad says she didn't find fencing. The sport found her. She and her mom were driving past a fencing practice in Maplewood, N.J. What caught their eyes was...

IBTIHAJ MUHAMMAD: The attire. Fencers, they wear long jackets. And they wear long pants. And as a Muslim youth, I was looking for a sport where I didn't have to alter the uniform in any way.

WANG: Muhammad began covering in high school as part of her faith. To play volleyball, she wore sweatpants and a T-shirt along with her team's uniform. But it was sabre fencing that gave her focus, as she told NPR back in 2012.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED BROADCAST)

MUHAMMAD: I enjoy being able to critique myself when I'm finished fencing. It's really easy to, you know, lose and be able to fix your mistakes, whereas on a team, you know, I guess whether you win or lose can be in the hands of someone else. And I've never felt comfortable with that.

WANG: At this year's women's sabre World Cup in January, Muhammad took home bronze. It was enough for her to finally make the U.S. Olympic team at 30 years old. And in the months leading up to Rio, she continued her training here at the Fencers Club in New York City.

WANG: How many times does Ibti come here to train?

AKHNATEN SPENCER-EL: She comes here, like, every day - every day, working hard.

WANG: Akhnaten Spencer-El has been coaching Muhammad for more than seven years now. He says her personality is a perfect fit for sabre fencing - strong-willed, aggressive and determined to win since day one.

SPENCER-EL: Sometimes, her personality can get her in trouble only because young kids, they question things. Why do I have to do push-ups? It's stuff, you know, regular stuff. But when you do that, you know, there are consequences (laughter).

WANG: Over the years, Muhammad learned to channel that spirit. She's now ranked No. 2 in the U.S. and eighth internationally in women's sabre fencing. She also launched a fashion line of modest women's clothing after graduating from Duke University. Through it all, Spencer-El says she has stayed poised against her competitors and a harsh public spotlight while wearing a hijab.

SPENCER-EL: Going through security and everybody comes out but her - or taking her into another place in the airport to search her than everyone else. It really doesn't even phase her. It's like, here we go again, I guess.

PETER WESTBROOK: Sometimes, she tells me, Peter, being a black woman is not easy. Being a Muslim woman is not easy. Combine the two. I walk down the street. I catch hell.

WANG: That was Peter Westbrook, one of Muhammad's fencing mentors. Back in 1984, he became the first African-American fencer to win an Olympic medal. Westbrook says he uses that experience to help Muhammad navigate through a predominantly white sport.

WESTBROOK: By being an African-American, by being a Muslim, her nerves is always on edge. So this sport is natural for her because this is a nerve sport.

WANG: One where losing or winning can be determined in a hundredth of a second. Still, like athletes who broke barriers before her, Ibtihaj Muhammad also has had to fend off personal attacks. A few months ago, she posted on Twitter that a man followed her down a street in Manhattan, saying that she looked, quote, "suspicious" and asking if she was going to blow something up.

MUHAMMAD: America's all that I know. I feel American down to my bones. And for anyone to challenge that idea that I'm not American or that I don't belong, it's frustrating.

You know, I want people to see a Muslim woman in hijab and represent the United States this summer. I don't want people to think that that's out of the norm.

WANG: Muhammad says she wishes she wasn't the first Muslim woman in a hijab to represent Team USA. But she hopes she won't be the last. Hansi Lo Wang, NPR News. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.